A dead star devouring its own planets like a rampaging cosmic zombie has been scarred by planetary debris.
The imprinted metal scar sits on the surface of this white dwarf star; this type of stellar remnant will be left over when the sun dies as well, and shows there is “life after death” for planetary systems.
The scar on the surface of the white dwarf, dubbed WD 0816-310, was spotted by a team of astronomers using the Very Large Telescope (VLT) located in the Atacama desert region of Northern Chile. It represents the first unique signature seen on a white dwarf star due to the cannibalization of planets and asteroids.
“It is well known that some white dwarfs — slowly cooling embers of stars like our sun — are cannibalizing pieces of their planetary systems,” team leader and Armagh Observatory astronomer Stefano Bagnulo said in a statement. “Now we have discovered that the star’s magnetic field plays a key role in this process, resulting in a scar on the white dwarf’s surface.”
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The team of astronomers was able to use the VLT to discover the origins of the metal scar worn by WD 0816-310, which around the size of Earth with a mass around that of the sun.
“We have demonstrated that these metals originate from a planetary fragment as large as or possibly larger than Vesta, which is about 500 kilometers (311 miles) across and the second-largest asteroid in the solar system,” Jay Farihi, discovery team member and University College London professor, said in the statement.
White dwarfs are born when stars around the size of the sun exhaust the fuel supply necessary for nuclear fusion happening in their cores. As this process ends, so does the outward-flowing energy that has supported each star against the inward push of its own gravity for billions of years.
This results in the core of the star collapsing while its outer layers, where nuclear fusion proceeds, “puff out” to tens, or hundreds, of times the original width of the dying star. This is known as the red giant phase of the star’s life, and it is a phase the sun will experience in around 5 billion years. When it becomes a red giant, the sun will swell out to around the orbit of Mars and swallow the inner planets, including Earth.
The red giant phase is short-lived, with the star’s outer layers continuing to disperse and cool. This eventually leaves behind a planetary nebula of gas and dust. This nebula would be…
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